An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/stechen

An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, S (1891)
by Friedrich Kluge, translated by John Francis Davis
stechen
Friedrich Kluge2510176An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, S — stechen1891John Francis Davis

stechen, vb., ‘to prick, stab, engrave,’ from the equiv. MidHG. stëchen, OHG. stëhhan, str. vb. From this strong verbal root stek, which is preserved in MidEur. Teut. (OSax. stëkan, Du. steken, OFris. steka); comp. sticken, Stecken, and Stichel. By passing from the i class into the e class this root (comp. bitten) originated in an older form stik, pre-Teut. stig, which has a variant tig, ‘to be sharp,’ in the non-Teut. languages. Comp. Sans. tij, ‘to be sharp, sharpen’ (tigmá, ‘pointed, sharp’), Gr. στίγμα, ‘prick, point,’ from στέζω, ‘to mark with a pointed instrument, prick,’ Lat. instîgare, ‘to goad on, incite.’ Whether these are connected further with a prehistoric root stik, stink (see Stange), is uncertain. —